Thursday, December 13, 2012

12 Dec

Market Wizard Gary Bielfeldt
OCTOBER 3, 2012 in MARKET WIZARDS

“The most important is discipline – I am sure everyone tells you that. Second, you have to have patience; if you have a good trade on, you have to be able to stay with it. Third, you need courage to go into the market, and courage comes from adequate capitalization. Fourth, you must have a willingness to lose; that is also related to adequate capitalization. Fifth, you need a strong desire to win.”

As I started to read the Market Wizards interview with Gary Bielfeldt, which is the shortest interview in the entire book, I didn’t expect much. Being as the interview was short and I had never heard of him before, I figured this would just be a quick interview with someone who made some money. What I got instead was the exact opposite from what I expected.

I really like that Bielfedt started trading with only $1,000 and that he continued to only trade his own money after he got big. This makes him a role model for the path I want to pursue. The quoted paragraph above is Bielfeldt’s response to the question “What are the traits of a successful trader?” As I read this paragraph, and then re-read it, I couldn’t help thinking about how I stack up in each of these five areas.

Discipline
I like to think of myself as very disciplined when it comes to sticking to my system. However, after my recent selling, I have started to question how disciplined I really am. I keep making changes to my system that I think are improvements, but is that just a lack of discipline to stick to the original plan? Also, just because I am more disciplined than most of the people I know doesn’t mean that I have enough discipline to trade successfully.”

Patience
Patience is probably my weakest of these five traits. For as long as I can remember I have never really been patient about anything. My trading is no different. I I have chased after extended stocks as well as bought too soon because I was afraid that the market was going to take off without me. I need to work on this more than anything else.

Courage
This is an area that I have improved in tremendously over the past 18 months. I have found that the combination of more knowledge and more experience have given me greatly increased confidence in my purchases. This has allowed me to feel more comfortable when I establish new positions.

Willingness To Lose
I think my trade history speaks for itself in this department. I have no issue with taking losses. When I establish a position, I put a stop-loss order in and that is it. Although taking losses has never been an issue, the fact that so many are beginning to pile up this year is starting to concern me. I fear that these losses might affect my confidence in the future.

Strong Desire To Win
One one hand, how many people do you know that write 500 word blog posts about the stock market three times per week. On the other hand, maybe I’m more interested in being a stock market writer than a stock market trader. This is one of those deep personal questions I ask myself in the middle of the night and I have yet to come across an answer.

How do these traits affect your trading?

Biography
Bruce Kovner's Jewish family came to Brooklyn, New York, in the early 1900s from Tsarist Russia, fleeing persecution for their left-wing and atheist beliefs. Two of Kovner's fathers' cousins faced the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s, pleading the Fifth Amendment. However, Bruce's father, Moishe Kovner, was more conservative than his kin, at one point even crossing a picket line to work.[6]

Bruce Kovner grew up in the San Fernando Valley, where his father had moved the family in 1953. Early on, he was a high achiever, becoming a Merit Scholar. He was the student-body president of Van Nuys High School at 16, and an accomplished basketball player.[6]

Kovner went to Harvard College starting in 1962, a time marred by the hanging suicide of his mother back in his family's Van Nuys home. Nonetheless, he was considered a good student and was well liked by his classmates. Avoiding the Vietnam draft by student deferment (when it was still available), Kovner stayed at Harvard, studying political economy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, notably under prominent conservative scholar Edward C. Banfield, who reportedly had great faith and admiration for the young Kovner.

Kovner did not finish his Ph.D., having suffered a severe case of writer's block and overreached in his choice of subject matter. Over the next few years, he engaged in a number of eclectic efforts; he worked on political campaigns, studied the harpsichord, was a writer, and a cab driver. It was during the latter occupation, not long after his marriage to now ex-wife Sarah Peter, that he discovered commodities trading.
[edit]Business

Kovner's first trade was in 1977 for $3,000, borrowed against his MasterCard, in soybean futures contracts. Realizing growth to $40,000, he then watched the contract drop to $23,000 before selling.[4] He later claimed that this first, nerve-racking trade taught him the importance of risk management.

In his eventual role as a trader under Michael Marcus at Commodities Corporation (now part of Goldman Sachs), he purportedly made millions and gained widespread respect as an objective and sober trader.This ultimately led to the establishment of his current company, Caxton Associates, in 1983, which at its peak managed over $10 billion in capital and has been closed to new investors since 1992.

Kovner is not well known outside of professional circles. He has very rarely given interviews, and is notoriously private. His Fifth Avenue apartment in New York City features a lead-lined room to protect against a chemical, biological, or dirty bomb attack.

Trading Is Timing

Trading always comes down to timing. To truly appreciate this, we simply need to note that one of the biggest gains in stock market history occurred on October 19, 1987, during the day of its greatest crash. On that day, stocks had declined a mind-harrowing 23% by the end of the day, but at around 1:30 p.m., they staged a massive rally that saw the Dow Jones and S&P indexes verticalize off the bottom, rising more than 10% before running out of steam and turning down to end the day on the lows.

While most traders that day lost money, those who bought that bottom at 1:30 p.m. and sold their positions an hour later were rewarded with some of the best short-term gains in stock market history. Conversely, traders unfortunate enough to have shorted at 1:30 p.m. only to cover in panic an hour later held the dubious distinction of losing money on their shorts during the day of stock market's greatest decline. (For more on market declines, check out our Market Crashes Tutorial.)

If nothing else, the stock market crash of 1987 proved that trading is all about timing. Timing is hard to master, but you can still capture significant gains on an ill-timed trade if you follow a few simple rules.

The Advantage of Avoiding MarginWhat happens to traders who are terrible timers? Can traders who are poor timers ever succeed - especially in the currency market where ultra-high leverage and stop driven price action often forces margin calls?

The answer is yes.

Some of the world's best traders, including market wizard Jim Rogers, are still able to succeed. Rogers - and his famous short trade in gold - is well worth examining in more detail. In 1980, when gold spiked to record highs on the back of double-digit inflation and geopolitical unrest, Rogers became convinced that market for the yellow metal was becoming manic. He knew that like all parabolic markets, the rise in gold could not continue indefinitely. Unfortunately, as is so often the case with Rogers, he was early to the trade. He shorted gold at around $675 an ounce while the precious metal continued to rise all the way to $800. Most traders would not have been able to withstand such adverse price movement in their position, but Rogers - an astute student of the markets - knew that history was on his side and managed not only to hold on, but also to profit, eventually covering the short near $400 an ounce.

Aside from his keen analytics and a steely resolve, what was the key to Rogers' success? He used no leverage in his trade. By not employing margin, Rogers never put himself at the mercy of the market and could therefore liquidate his position when he chose to do so rather than when a margin call forced him out of the trade. By not employing leverage on his position, Rogers was not only able to stay in the trade but he was also able to add to it at higher levels, creating a better overall blended price.

Slow and Low is the Way to GoFor currency traders, the Rogers trade in gold holds many lessons. Experienced traders are familiar with being stopped out or margin called from a position that was going their way. What makes trading such a difficult vocation is that timing is very hard to master. By using little or no leverage, Rogers provided himself with a much larger margin for error and, therefore, did not need to be correct to the penny in order to capture massive gains. Currency traders who are unable to accurately time the market would be well advised to follow his strategy and deleverage themselves. Just like the common cooking saying, success in FX trading is based on the idea that 'slow and low is the way to go'. Namely, traders should enter into their positions slowly, with very small chunks of capital and use only the smallest leverage to initiate a trade.

To better illustrate this point, let's look at two traders. Both traders start with $10,000 of speculative capital and both feel that the EUR/USD is overvalued and decide to short it at 1.3000. Trader A employs 50:1 leverage, selling $500,000 worth of EUR/USD pair short against the $10,000 of equity in his speculative account. On a standard 1% margin account, Trader A allows himself only 100 points of leeway before he is margin called and forced out of the market. If EUR/USD rallies to 1.3100 Trader A is out with a massive loss. Trader B, on the other hand, uses much more conservative leverage of 5:1 only selling $50,000 EUR/USD short at the 1.3000 level. When the pair rallies to 1.3100 Trader B comes out relatively unscathed, suffering only a minor floating loss of $500. Furthermore, as the pair rallies to 1.3300 he is able to add to his short position and achieve a better blended price of 1.3100. If the pair then finally turns down and simply trades back down to his original entry level, trader B already becomes profitable. Both traders made the same trade. Both were completely wrong on timing, yet the results could not have been more different.

No Stops? Big Problem!Jim Rogers' slow and low approach to trading, while clearly successful, suffers from one glaring flaw: it does not use stops. While Rogers' method of buying value and selling hysteria has worked well over the years, it can very be vulnerable to a catastrophic event that can take prices to unimagined extremes and wipe out even the most conservative trading strategy. That is why currency traders may want to examine the methods of another market wizard, Gary Bielfeldt. This plain-spoken Midwesterner made a fortune trading Treasury bonds in the 1980s when interest rates rose to record yields of 14%.

Gary Bielfeldt went long Treasury bond futures once rates hit those levels, believing that such high rates of interest were economically unsustainable and would not persist. However, much like Jimmy Rogers, Gary Bielfeldt was not a great timer. He initiated his trade with bonds trading at the 63 level but they kept falling, eventually trading all the way down to 56. However, Bielfeldt did not allow his losses to get out of control. He simply took stops every time the position moved a half or one point against him. He was stopped out several times as bonds slowly and painfully carved out a bottom. However, he never wavered in his analysis and continued to execute the same trade despite losing money repeatedly. When bonds prices finally turned, his approach paid off as his longs soared in value and he was able to collect profits far in excess of his accumulated losses.

Gary Bielfeldt's method of trading holds many lessons for currency traders. Much like Jim Rogers, Bielfeldt is a successful trader who had difficulty timing the market. Instead of nursing losses, however, he would methodically stop himself out. What made him unique was his unwavering confidence in his analysis, which allowed him to enter the same trade over and over again, while many lesser traders quit and walked away from the profit opportunity. Bielfeldt's probative approach served him well by allowing him to participate in the trade while limiting his losses. This strong combination of discipline and persistence is a great example to currency traders who wish to succeed in trading but are unable to properly time their trades.

A Little Technical HelpWhile both Rogers and Bielfeldt used fundamental analysis as the basis behind their trades, there are also technical indicators that currency traders can use to help them trade more effectively. One such tool is the relative strength index (RSI). The RSI compares the magnitude of the currency pair's recent gains to the magnitude of its recent losses and turns that information into a number that ranges from 0 to 100. A value of 70 or more is considered to be overbought and a value of 30 or less is seen as oversold. A trader who has a strong opinion on the direction of a particular currency pair would do well to wait until his thesis was confirmed by RSI readings. For example, in the following chart, a trader who wanted to short the EUR/USD on the premise that the pair was overvalued would have been much more accurate if he or she waited until the RSI readings dropped below 70, indicating that most of the buying momentum was gone from the pair.


Figure 1

ConclusionTiming is a vital ingredient to successful trading, but traders can still achieve profitability even if they are poor timers. In the currency market, the key to success lies with taking small positions using low leverage so that ill-timed trades can have plenty of room to absorb any adverse price action. However, trading without stops is never a wise strategy. That is why even poor timers should adopt a probative approach that methodically keeps trading losses to a minimum while allowing the trader to continuously re-establish the position. Finally, using even a simple technical indicator such as RSI can make fundamental strategies much more efficient by improving trade entries. Some of the greatest traders in the world have proven that one does not need to be a great timer to make money in the markets, but by using the techniques discussed above, the chances of success improve dramatically.

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